The Eve of Destruction

An absolute must-read for anyone interested in fully appreciating the mindset and motivations of the fictitious militants who emerge to capture the collective imagination of an impatient generation of Black folks living in Indianapolis, Indiana in the wake of the election of Mitt Romney. More

An absolute must-read for anyone interested in fully appreciating the mindset and motivations of the fictitious militants who emerge to capture the collective imagination of an impatient generation of Black folks living in Indianapolis, Indiana in the wake of the election of Mitt Romney. What would happen if Blacks, whites, and Hispanic’s decide to start killing each other? What if Black people think attacks against whites are justified, and even encouraged, because of white racism? So what will happen if it becomes the thing in the ghetto to gather in hordes and start killing white people? Race relations are deteriorating at a rapid pace in America. Blacks, Hispanics, and white militias are becoming more militant than ever. Criminals and thugs are now worshiped in the ghetto. In addition, are whites to bear all the blame? Is it fair? Are there good white people? Black people are confused and divided! Where will you be if a race riot starts? What will you do? Are you prepared? Some Black’s feel that we’ve gone far too long without taking the race problem seriously enough, and we have little time in which to try to right the wrongs. We are sliding headlong into terrible racial conflict that will dwarf the Los Angeles riots because certain members of our “post racial” society have not grown up devoted to racial equality the way Black folks thought or hoped they would. Let me reiterate that Black involvement in this fictitious race war was largely a reactive response to deliberate provocations by white supremacists, neglect of our communities, and the elimination of government programs, but also because of those law and order white Americans whose abuses of the criminal justice system drove us Blacks to say, "We've had enough!" It will be for the most part a Black-versus-white fictitious war, because the rapidly growing Hispanic population has not yet quite learned that the paranoid white folks who spew rhetoric about killing to save the white race have no more respect for them than they do for Black people.

Allow me to introduce myself, my name is Phillip Norton. I am a 58 year old Black blooded writer/visual activist/urban street missionary born in Cleveland, Ohio and raised in Gary, Indiana, who now resides in Indianapolis, Indiana. I, as a righteously angry Black man growing up in the Gary, Indiana urban experience have witnessed many events in my life from a very unique point of view, one that is almost impossible to express through the so called mainstream media that will never showcase a talent who doesn't echo their spiritually twisted, off base, narrow minded, delusional, condescending, schizophrenic, and hypocritical perceptions of Black reality. As an outspoken Black writer/ artist, it is very difficult to express yourself fully when the medium that publishes your work has the final say in the finished product, most often literally robbing it of its intended impact and message! I know all too well from experience that it is next to impossible to gain any lucrative acknowledgement from the very oppressors to whom I target in my work as I attempt to enlighten the ignorant and break the mental chains put on us through an educational system that never will activate the dormant greatness that exists in our mighty Black souls. Fearing none but God, I am on a divine and relentless mission to brazenly speak the truth through my creative visuals and explosive words to destroy the dysfunctions and denials of reality that are epidemic in our Black communities. Read on and let the much needed detoxification, cleansing and reprogramming begin. My talents are God given and do not belong to me, so I have a responsibility with all I have been exposed to in this life to enlighten others in my own unique way to the lessons that I have learned. Much love and solidarity brothers and sisters.